Travesties was born out of Stoppard's noting that in 1917 three of the
twentieth century's most crucial revolutionaries -- James Joyce, the
Dadaist founder Tristan Tzara, and Lenin -- were all living in Zurich.
Also living in Zurich at this time was a British consula official called
Henry Carr, a man acquainted with Joyce through the theater and later
through a lawsuit concerning a pair of trousers. Taking Carr as his
core, Stoppard spins this historical coincidence into a masterful and
riotously funny play, a speculative portrait of what could have been the
meeting of these profoundly influential men in a germinal Europe as seen
through the lucid, lurid, faulty, and wholy riveting memory of an aging
Henry Carr.